Polish Translation Services

CCJK is one of the most dominant translation provider of quality Polish document translations for corporate and personal use. We strive to maintain reasonable pricing in over 80 language pairs. With over thousands of native and industry-specific linguistics worldwide we ensure to work round the clock and provide fastest turnaround

“Turnaround and service with CCJK Translation was great. Everything was quick and the developments went smoothly.”– Josephine Komarmi

CCJK Polish Statistics

Below is some information on our capabilities in the Polish language, and the language in general:

80

No. of Translators

25

Projects per Month

10

Native Speaking Project Managers

31/100

Popularity Ranking

40m

Speakers

1

Official Language Countries

Let the experts handle it

CCJK provides professional Polish translation services at incomparable prices. CCJK has a competent skilled pool of native Polish translators. They have industry specific experience and a good understanding of the language in its context. We have a global working team which enables us to cater globally round the clock punctually.

CCJK mainly translates Polish to English or English to Polish, although we also provide translation into other language pairs. CCJK strives to provide exact and in-context Polish translation services for Contracts, Brochures & Catalogs, Reports, User Guide / Technical Manuals, Website, Software, Books & Magazines, Correspondence, Certificates, Legal Documents and Multimedia Presentations. We ensure that all our translations are carried out by native speakers who have industry specific experience in specialties like Business Marketing or Advertising, Financial, Legal, IT or Telecommunications, Energy or Oil & Gas, Automotive, Architecture or Civil Engineering, Medical, Pharmaceutical and more.

Insight of Polish Language

Polish is a Slavic language spoken primarily in Poland and the native language of the Poles. Being the official language of Poland it has over 40 million native speakers worldwide. Polish ethnic communities are widely dispersed in countries of Czech, Slovakia, Romania, Ukraine and the United States. Poland joined NATO in 1999 and has been a member of the European Union since 2004.

What’s the most impressive is how Poland stood in the storm when the economic crisis hit Europe late 2008, and it is the only member state of the EU not to suffer negative growth during the crisis. At the end of 2009, Poland witnessed its quick recovery from the recession with a 1.7% economic growth. And amidst the European debt crisis, Poland’s GDP grew up by 3.9% and 4.3% in 2010 and 2011 respectively. Partitions of Poland, caused challenges to the Polish language, a rich literature has nevertheless established over the centuries and the language currently has the largest number of speakers of the West Slavic group. It is also the second most widely spoken Slavic language, after Russian and just ahead of Ukrainian, which comes third.